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Norman king in ceremonial costume (118). The coats of kings and nobility were not always...

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FLO4707847
Image title
Norman king in ceremonial costume (118). The coats of kings and nobility were not always the same length, sometimes they were so long that they dragged on the floor, the coats of Normans and Saxons were often fastened to the chest. The Norman kings and the nobility wore two tunics of equal length, one on top of the other, the one below was probably made of cotton. The custom of wearing long tunics with a coat, falling to the heels, comes from Germany and was adopted by the Saxons. From the late 11th, early 12th century, men and women wore this type of tunic, extremely long, often with embroidered borders. Hand-coloured copper engraving, in “Images historiques des costumes des principaux peuples de l'Antiquite et du Middle Ages” by Robert Von Spalart, published in 1796.
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Norman king in ceremonial costume (118). The coats of kings and nobility were not always the same length, sometimes they were so long that they dragged on the floor, the coats of Normans and Saxons were often fastened to the chest. The Norman kings and the nobility wore two tunics of equal length, one on top of the other, the one below was probably made of cotton. The custom of wearing long tunics with a coat, falling to the heels, comes from Germany and was adopted by the Saxons. From the late 11th, early 12th century, men and women wore this type of tunic, extremely long, often with embroidered borders. Hand-coloured copper engraving, in “Images historiques des costumes des principaux peuples de l'Antiquite et du Middle Ages” by Robert Von Spalart, published in 1796.

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© Florilegius / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
1st century / 10th century / 11th century / 12th century / 13th century / 18th century / coat / clothes / costume / engraving / human / mode / nobility / coat / king / Strone / middle age / medium / clothing

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Largest available format 2186 × 3381 px 4 MB
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